Old Dominion football expenses would jump with move to C-USA

When the Executive Committee of Old Dominion's Board of Visitors meets May 14, members are expected to receive information from president John Broderick and athletic director Wood Selig about the school's invitation from and potential move to Conference USA.

Several board members said earlier this week that they knew little more about ODU's discussions and exploration of Conference USA than what they had read and heard in local media reports.

When news broke Tuesday prematurely linking ODU to C-USA, Broderick sent an email to board members assuring them that he and his colleagues were studying all areas of conference affiliation to best position the athletic department for future success.

Board members were inclined to wait until they were briefed before they offered opinions about jumping to another conference or remaining in the Colonial Athletic Association, the school's athletic home since 1991. All expressed confidence in Broderick's leadership and ability to provide them with requisite information to make an informed decision.

One board member emphasized that, no matter the recommendation from Broderick or athletic department officials, it wasn't likely to simply "rubber stamp" the call without serious deliberation.

Contained within the information board members are likely to receive is the fact that Conference USA presently stretches 1,700 miles — from Greenville, N.C., to El Paso, Texas. The league's footprint encompasses West Virginia and North Carolina in the east, south to Florida, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana and extends west to Oklahoma and west Texas.

Though Conference USA would provide ODU a natural rival in East Carolina, the newly expanding league will have twice as many members in Texas (Rice, UTEP, UT San Antonio and North Texas) as in North Carolina (ECU and Charlotte).

Most notably, a move to C-USA would raise the ante significantly for Old Dominion's football program and affirms that football is the engine driving the athletic department train. ODU's program, entering its fourth year, competes at the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) level. C-USA schools play one step up, at the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) level.

Here are the football expenses at ODU and the present remaining eight C-USA schools, courtesy of theU.S. Dept. of Education's Equity in Athletics Data Analysis data base. The figures are from 2010-11, the most recent full year. Numbers are rounded up.

School*FB operating exp*FB total exp

ODU*$824,000*$5 million

UAB*$854,000*$6.6 million

USM*$879,000*$6.4 million

ECU*$2.9 million*$8.6 million

Tulsa*$2.1 million*$9.7 million

Rice*$1.1 million*$12.3 million

Marshall*$1.3 million*$6.3 million

Tulane*$730,000*$7.4 million

UTEP*$2 million*$8 million

Additional expenses for ODU football include travel — with Georgia State's upcoming departure, the CAA's football footprint stretches from Maine to Virginia, basketball from Boston to Wilmington, N.C. There are an extra 22 scholarships (FCS allows a maximum of 63, FBS a max of 85), a larger roster, a greater recruiting budget, expansion to 20,000-seat Foreman Field, as well as pay raises for the staff commensurate with FBS-level coaching salaries.

A step up to FBS also affects the school's Title IX profile. According to the Department of Education's website, ODU's undergraduate student ratio is 48 percent men to 52 percent women. Its athletic participation ratio is 52 percent men to 48 percent women, not a great disparity. Men receive 59 percent of the school's athletic aid, compared to 41 percent for women.

However, an extra 22 scholarship male athletes, as well as walk-ons, and another $400,000-$500,000 in annual scholarship costs further skew those percentages. That could force the athletic department to consider adding a women's sport, with the accompanying costs, in order to balance those ratios.

Conference USA is losing four members to the Big East: Memphis, Houston, SMU and Central Florida. That's a response to West Virginia departing the Big East for the Big 12 Conference, and Syracuse and Pitt moving to the ACC.

C-USA is adding five schools: Charlotte of the Atlantic 10, Florida International and the University of North Texas from the Sun Belt, and Louisiana Tech and Texas-San Antonio from the Western Athletic Conference. Charlotte and Texas-San Antonio are fielding start-up football programs that aim to play at the FBS level.

C-USA wants a 14-team league, with two seven-team divisions for football. Old Dominion is its preferred target, according to sources. C-USA officials have toured the campus and facilities.

The league hoped to announce the six new members Friday, but sources said it granted ODU an extension in order to inform leadership and to further evaluate the potential move. The length of the extension hasn’t been made public, but ODU must declare to the NCAA by June 1 if it wants to reclassify its football program for 2013.

Old Dominion's conference explorations were accelerated by uncertainty surrounding the CAA, specifically rivals and fellow conference basketball powers VCU and George Mason considering a move to the Atlantic 10. Historically, the A-10 has been a better basketball conference than the CAA, with a higher rating and more at-large invitations to the NCAA tournament.

VCU and George Mason appear to have put any plans of changing conferences on hold, at least temporarily, though the A-10 announced this week that it would add Butler.

Still, the possibility of an FBS conference home for its football program has Old Dominion officials considering a move that would affect its entire athletic program for years to come.

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